day 29 – Homemade Pasta -part one – chap. three

The lights would eventually be turned off (save a nightlight she insisted on) and we’d say goodnight into the semi-dark and inevitably would start to communicate.

“Que fue ese ruido?” (What was that noise?), she would ask in her Argentine Spanish called Castilian with a melodic sing-song heavily laden Italian accent.  I later learned in a linguistics college course that once you reach the age of puberty, you are stricken with an inability to ever lose your accent  when learning a new language due to the jaw bone rigidity that is perpetuated with adolescence.  It is a convincing and scientific argument for learning several languages at once before the junior high age.

In my unbelievably horrendous version of the Spanish language, I replied, trying to console, “No es nada Abuela, solo es el viento.” (It’s nothing, Grandma, it’s only the wind.)

The chatting ensued.  Abuela Estela told me about my similar-aged girl cousins (whom she was lucky enough to live with), my dad’s childhood including his mischievous but clever antics, and about her own life growing up in Italy as a child and into her teenage years before her move to Argentina.

Interspersed and interrupting our conversation, she queried,  “Estas segura que apagaste la luz en el bano?  Te lavaste las manos?” (Are you sure you shut off the bathroom light?  Did you wash your hands?)

“Claro que si” (of course) I assured her so she could sense all was well and resume her narrative.

day 27 – Homemade Pasta part one – chapter two

Abuela Estela, as I affectionately called my grandmother, slept in the adjoining twin bed of my upstairs childhood bedroom when she came to stay with us.  Our thin, cherry-colored, summer bedspreads matched.  Bed sheets had to be tucked and pulled tightly – military style.   Dividing our parallel single beds stood a cream-colored nightstand with a black-swept antiqued finish. My mom had painted and distressed all my bedroom furniture on a plain pine canvass of dressers, desks and bookshelves.  The red and black wall-to-wall tightly woven carpet juxtaposed my rosy-pink lemonade walls.  My furry stuffed animals shared space on my many shelves with my colorful Childcraft Encyclopedia Set and my treasured amateur international shell and stamp collections. Nag champa incense smoke occasionally drifted and mysteriously comingled with the fragrance of Jean Nate eau de toilette body splash. Perhaps these became my gateway scents into the world of Chanel #5, fine perfumes and the early warning signs of the outright obsession I have with aromatherapy today.

The only other time my grandmother had traveled at all was when she was sixteen and crossed the Atlantic from Italy to Argentina circa 1928 via an ocean vessel that must have rocked and rolled along the waves at an excruciatingly slow and frightening pace because she dreaded all forms of voyaging.  Coming to the USA to visit her son and grandchildren was a sacrifice for her. It was an enormous undertaking and a courageous feat.  She was comprised of and exuded fear, worry and more layers of trepidation and terror from every pore. Her panicked anxiety and agitation over everything defined her and was clearly evident in her twitching body and trembling voice.

I watched her.  Her signature crimson matte lipstick made her tan complexion glow and she wore it at all times like a monogram.  She limped and rocked from side to side due to a bad hip she refused to have surgery for because she was afraid of being put under anesthesia and the knife.  Occasionally, she winced and let out a small yelp from the pain if she walked too much or too far.  Her youthful loveliness visibly stood stalwart behind her midlife lines and flaccid skin.

I understood and comforted Abuela with all the compassion and patience a pre-adolescent could muster. Nightly, I cuddled up and read from my Illustrated Children’s Bible to soothe me before bedtime. I had to turn my head and look away while my Abuela undressed and put on her nightgown.  She was extremely modest, embarrassed or both and required this of me and deemed it highly important to our evening regime.  Whenever I forgot, she chastised me with a severe and loud plea to turn away, “por favor.”

day 26 – Homemade Pasta – Part One, Chapter One

My father loved homemade pasta. And in the era of Jell-O, Tang, Kraft Macaroni and Cheese, Rice a Roni and Ronzoni dried pasta – there was none to be had, unless, of course, you went into NYC and found a neighborhood dive in an Italian section of town that might still be serving fresh noodles.  We rarely ate out ever because my father pronounced my mom’s cooking so delectable – “Why go out?”

“Your dad is just cheap,” my mom would explain.

My parents immigrated to the USA from Argentina in the early 1960’s, and after a series of moves and efforts, finally settled on a long stretch of sand and loam called Long Island.  It lay sandwiched between Connecticut and the Atlantic Ocean, jutting out from the state of NY like a pencil.

My dad raved about his mom’s homemade pasta.  He described its texture, taste and feel frequently and with abandon. How it was chewy but didn’t stick in his teeth. How it somehow magically transformed flour, eggs, salt, oil and water into an alchemic delight.  How he only needed butter and cheese, no sauce, to authentically relish it in its most naked form.

My mom hailed from Spanish descent (Andalusia and Castile) and learned from another set of apron strings.   Or, maybe, she did not care to compete with her mother-in-law’s handiwork. Nonetheless, on the pretense of showing off our new life and first home, my paternal grandmother was summoned to come stay with us for a visit from spring to October back in 1971.  I was 11 years old and she was going to be my roommate.

TUNE IN TOMORROW FOR MORE…..

day 15 – Believe it Or Not

Believe it or not, we have a subscription to two what I call ‘trash’ periodicals.

If you:

  1. Have little or no sense of humor
  2. Take everything way too seriously
  3. Desire a break from saving/controlling the world
  4. Hate flying and require inane distraction
  5. Need to put your troubles into perspective
  6. Require trivial respite for any reason….

Then these ‘rags’ are for you, too.

In one of these ‘treasures’, there is a cute Ten Things You Didn’t Know About_________(fill in the blank with star’s name).

So here’s ten things you may or may not know about me.  And please do the same.  This can be fun and informative for all of us.  Perhaps you may just want to post three or five. It’s totally up to you.  But, don’t be shy.

1.  I was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina but grew up on Long Island, New York

2.  In 1978, I worked for the soccer World Cup in Argentina,  relaying telex messages around the world for journalists.

3.  My very first job was building and soldering PC boards at the age of 17, in East Northport, NY

4.  My younger and only sibling married my husband’s little brother back in 1993, still together

5.  I taught High School Spanish in three different states: NY, North Carolina and CA back in the eighties.

6.  I ate ten slices of pizza on my tenth birthday in honor of my ten years.  Pizza is still my favorite meal.  Ten is one of my favorite numbers.

7.  I became a UC Master Gardener the second year it was offered in Orange County, back in the late ’90’s

8.  I started my own business, Good4uCooking in February of 2003.

9.  After years of yoga devotion, I became a yoga instructor in 2010.

10.  I have seen over 250 artists at concerts over the course of my life, starting with Elton John at age fourteen.  Repeatedly for most of my favorites.

I hope there was a surprise here or there. Often, we beat ourselves up for not doing enough or doing things “wrong”.   It’s enjoyable to list positive or funny things you have accomplished.

day 14 – Toodooloo Mary Lou

I have an absolutely fabulous girlfriend who just ‘gets’ me and has always loved me unconditionally with love and acceptance, always, through some rather rough patches.   We have lived through the ups and downs of life together since college and the only glitch is she lives in New York and I live in California.  Through the years we have gained and lost many pounds.  We are both expert taste testers, critics and avid admirers of fine foods.  We meet once a year somewhere in the USA and consider the food culture important to our travel/sight seeing.

We are collaborating on a bi-coastal fitness/wellness relationship now.  We are giving each other encouragement, compassion and tips for success.  We have previously attempted this arrangement and it always works out well, but we have been slacking and times have changed and so have our bodies, so we decided we need to revamp and pump it up.  We had lost our way recently due to Super Storm Sandy on the East Coast, Thanksgiving and general hormonal trouble on the West Coast.

Our goals have changed. Formerly, we just cared about how we looked.  It’s a tad deeper now.   We have a sincere desire to see our young adult children get through college, start lives of their own, obtain a quality of life a strong body/mind can provide, travel together more and remain mobile, still wear eccentric, fun and wild outfits and continue to exude that positive high energy that attracts us to each other in the first place and feeds our respective creative juices.  Girlie Girl Goals these days requires Big Girl Panties and a Woman’s commitment.

We know we need self-confidence, motivation and high self-esteem.   We lack self-discipline in a big way. We could use some determination, planning and a wellspring of self-worth.  We can help each other out.  This is where BFFs come in handy.  No one comes close to knowing how you tick and confronting you with all the loopholes you will find to avoid exercise, eat whatever you desire (not need) and then rationalize it all.  Your good buddy will stop the self-sabotaging, calling you honestly and (this is crucial) delicately on your BS and prevent you from fooling yourself, once again.  Mary Lou will make and keep me accountable and vice versa.

Do you have a long time gal pal you can identify, strategize and join with in an effort to improve self?

Do you have exercise/sane food habits to share with us?

We will keep you posted.